Extremist group U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights ambushed Booker: “amid the rush, he was posing for a photo and was passed a sign to hold — he didn’t have time to read the sign, and … didn’t realize it had anything to do with Israel”

Senator Cory Booker appeared at the Netroots 2018 conference.

Netroots is the annual gathering of far-left (“progressive”) activists. For presidential hopefuls hoping to generate buzz among the base, Netroots is a must. This year Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris, and Cory Booker were among the speakers.

Also in attendance was the anti-Israel group U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights (fka U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation).

The US Campaign for Palestinian Rights, formerly known as the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, is a leader and mobilizer of BDS activism in the United States. A 501(c)3 charitable organization founded in 2001, it self-describes as a “national coalition working to end all US support for Israel’s military occupation and apartheid policies toward Palestinians.”

According to NGO Monitor, a Jerusalem-based watchdog group, in 2016 USCPR had a budget of approximately $850,000. It claims that it receives the majority of its funding through “small individual donations.” However, it reportedly recently received $90,000 from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, which as we noted in several recent posts also funds JVP along with other virulently anti-Israel and pro-BDS groups:

USCPR works behind the scenes as an umbrella organization to organize and coordinate hundreds of groups…

As documented by NGO Monitor, some of the groups that USCPR supports have ties to Palestinian terror organizations. One of its staff members, Director of Grassroots Organizing Ramah Kudaimi, has promoted incitement to violence against Israelis.

It’s worth noting too that Josh Ruebner, who serves as USCPR’s Policy Director, is an ADL-flagged activist who has publicly claimed that the IDF “studied what the Nazis did” during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in order to “attack and kill Palestinians” in Gaza.

We discussed in a prior post that Ruebner also has a nasty habit of smearing Jewish members of Congress as “Israel firster” traitors to America because of their support for Israel….

Munayyer has also been at the forefront of the ugly effort within U.S.-based anti-Israel circles to exploit the U.S. civil rights struggle for the Palestinian cause. Under Munayyer’s directorship, USCPR has preposterously cast Israeli policies toward the Palestinians as a discriminatory “matrix of control” with laws similar to those used against Black Americans during the Jim Crow era.

These days, Munayyer spends an inordinate amount of his time trying to racialize the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, making untenable connections between the experiences of black men in America’s inner cities and his own as an Israeli Palestinian and trying to sell the idea that Palestinians are people of color oppressed by privileged white Jews.

It is not surprising that Netroots would offer USCPR the opportunity to host a panel during the conference.

For years we have been documenting the efforts by anti-Israel activists to stoke racial hatred of Israel through the concept of “intersectionality” – the notion that all revolutionary struggles, particularly against racism, are connected.

The movement to connect Ferguson-to-Palestine launched after the Michael Brown shooting, and has been a singular focus of Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) activists ever since….

No other country except Israel is used as pervasively as the connector for intersectionality. It’s a seedy tactic meant to exploit domestic U.S. racial tensions having nothing to do with Israel, and to turn those tensions into racial hatred of the supposedly “white” Israel. Underlying it all are anti-Semitic stereotypes of omnipresent Jewish manipulation…

USCPR at Netroots – Intersectional Anti-Israel Activism

So there they were at Netroots 2018, pushing the anti-Israel intersectional agenda:

USCPR’s messaging at Netroots sought to equate Zionism to racism, sexism, and even anti-Semitism. That’s right, USCPR equates Zionism to anti-Semitism. As I said, these are true extremists:

Comparing Mexican Border and Israeli Security Barrier

The USCPR messaging also equates the Israel security barrier, which was erected during the Second Intifada to prevent the suicide bombing campaign that killed several hundred Israelis, with barriers at the U.S.-Mexican border.

[Women’s March organizers Linda Sarsour and Carmen Perez stopped by the USCPR-Jewish Voice for Peace booth at the Women’s Convention, October 2017][via US Campaign Facebook]

But in the age of Trump, anti-Israel groups are trying to steer the Resistance into an anti-Israel stance with signs and messaging that say “From Palestine to Mexico, All the Walls Have To Go.” This close up of the panel shows that slogan on signs in front of each speaker:

Senator Cory Booker in Photo With Anti-Israel Sign

USCPR appeared to score a goal when it posted on Twitter a photo of U.S. Senator Cory Booker holding the “From Palestine to Mexico” sign, suggesting it was the result of discussions with him.

We immediately tweeted to Booker questioning his judgment in appearing with USCPR:

The image also generated immediate coverage, including at the Free Beacon:

Standing next to Booker in the picture is Leah Muskin-Pierret, who heads government affairs for the group and is wearing a shirt that says, “Palestine is a feminist/queer/refugee/racial justice issue.”

Muskin-Pierret has been a vocal anti-Israel advocate since her college years at Tufts University, where she was an active member of Students for Justice in Palestine, the main vehicle for rising anti-Israel activity on college campuses across the United States.

Muskin-Pierret’s views on Israel are so radical that she has even targeted J Street, a left-wing advocacy group highly critical of Israel.

“Lobbies like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and the only superficially more progressive J-Street continue to strong arm congressmen and presidents alike to swear their allegiance to Israel and hound those who dare voice even tepid dissent,” wrote Muskin-Pierret, who goes on to say the groups are controlled by “the same corrupt political money.”

She also contributed to the legal defense fund for Rasmea Odeh, who was convicted for her role in 1969 terrorist bombings in Jerusalem that killed numerous Israelis. The U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights has regularly voiced support for Odeh, professing its “love” for the terrorist and saying it hopes to see her in a “liberated Palestine.”

Booker Says Was Caught Off Guard – And Supports Israel’s Need for a Security Barrier

We reached out to Booker’s office, and by the time they responded just a little while longer, they were seeking to halt the building firestorm.

According to a statement released by Booker’s spokesperson, Booker was leaving Netroots when someone approached him for a photo and handed him a sign he didn’t pay much attention to:

“Just before delivering a speech in New Orleans, Senator Booker was approached by dozens of people for photos. In one instance, amid the rush, he was posing for a photo and was passed a sign to hold — he didn’t have time to read the sign, and from his cursory glance he thought it was talking about Mexico and didn’t realize it had anything to do with Israel. He hopes for a day when there will be no need for security barriers in the State of Israel, but while active terrorist organizations threaten the safety of the people living in Israel, security barriers are unfortunate but necessary to protect human lives,” said Booker spokesperson Jeff Giertz.

Booker’s stated scenario has a ring of truth to it. Anti-Israel activists are constantly seeking misleading photo ops to further their agenda. They understand the power of an image, and if the image is not what it seems, they don’t care. It’s a form of Pallywood.

But is Booker completely innocent here? He was at Netroots pandering to progressives. Someone handed him a sign and he didn’t even look at it? He may not have understood the significance of the slogan, but it should have raised a red flag with him even in that environment.

The best thing to come out of this is that a lot of people have been alerted to the deviousness of USCPR, and Booker reaffirmed the justification for Israel’s security barrier:

“while active terrorist organizations threaten the safety of the people living in Israel, security barriers are unfortunate but necessary to protect human lives”

So the anti-Israel activists scored a goal, but it appears to be an own-goal.

Comments

I’ve got a little bit of sympathy for The Book. Those photo lines are an assembly line operation. Pay your money, move up, smile, move on, next. He did at least backtrack, which is a step further than most.

To begin with I’m anti-Palestinian, pro-Israel, pro-Trump and after living over two decades in crap-holes such as this man lived as a successful adult, I kind of admire his character. It takes a lot of guts to live in the poorest neighborhoods around, especially when you don’t have to. Prior to politics Booker was a firebrand ‘do-gooder’, but it seems he ‘lived’ what he preached. Not like our Kenyan sock puppet. That’s a big deal to me…

Conversely, he’s a professional liar now (aka Politician) and it takes more wisdom than he’s shown here to become successful. Likewise, it grates on me that he twists Bible verses to justify his position…it really gets on my nerves, just throwing out a verse expecting every atheist in the room to understand what he’s saying. Grrr… Virtue signaling in the lowest form, IMO.

Maybe something unseen will cause him to shut his pie hole and quiet down a little. Although he’s talking about running for POTUS, probably in hopes of being Obama II, I can’t see it happening.

BDS is for dishonest people with weak minds, especially feminist losers who can’t find a husband to boss around and terrorist wannabee’s. I write them off as the insane haters of Israel that have reappeared for over 3,500 years…

To begin with I’m anti-Palestinian, pro-Israel, pro-Trump and after living over two decades in crap-holes such as this man lived as a successful adult, I kind of admire his character. It takes a lot of guts to live in the poorest neighborhoods around, especially when you don’t have to.

Did he? Where was he living before he was elected to the senate? Not in the Newark apartment he listed as his address, that’s for sure. It’s a big mystery where he was actually putting his head down at night, but the most likely-sounding speculation was Manhattan.

Prior to politics Booker was a firebrand ‘do-gooder’, but it seems he ‘lived’ what he preached.

not speaking for others, just for myself – all of Cory Booker’s stories about growing up on the “mean streets of Newark” were literary inventions which would have earned him top grades in any creative writing class, especially his stories about his imaginary drug dealer friend “T-Bone”, who apparently never actually existed:

Truth is that Booker grew up rich, son of two IBM executives, lived in a wealthy suburb 20 miles outside of Newark, went to Stanford University, and ALWAYS had a very comfortable and pampered life. This idea that he was ever on “the mean streets of Newark” is a fantasy that East Coast liberals love to hear from Black Politicians. In Cory’s case, it is all a lie.

Look up the news articles during his senate campaign, when people first started seriously digging into his self-made image and found there was nothing behind it. Also look for numerous news stories about the time he supposedly saved a neighbor from a fire. He wasn’t living at the apartment he listed as his address. Where he was living nobody knew and he refused to say.

Booker and Harris are two blacks that have missed the hate train that obama started. They will not get the sympathy from the center that obama got. Once he got into office the facade of MLK’s historic statement that “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” fell away from his biased face. That train has left the station and these two will not be on it. Now the two of them are beclowing themselves.

An interesting questionnaire for Palestinian Advocates by Yashiko Sagamori

If you are so sure that “Palestine, the country, goes back through most of recorded history,” I expect you to be able to answer a few basic questions about that country of Palestine:
When was it founded and by whom?
What were its borders?
What was its capital?
What were its major cities?
What constituted the basis of its economy?
What was its form of government?
Can you name at least one Palestinian leader before Arafat?
Was Palestine ever recognized by a country whose existence, at that time or now, leaves no room for interpretation?
What was the language of the country of Palestine?
What was the prevalent religion of the country of Palestine?
What was the name of its currency? Choose any date in history and tell what was the approximate exchange rate of the Palestinian monetary unit against the US dollar, the German mark, GB pound, Japanese yen, or Chinese yuan on that date.

And, finally, since there is no such country today, what caused its demise and when did it occur?

The Jews are the most hated people in history. Why? And what did Christ promise us? Brother against brother. Not peace in this world, but a sword. Not for us to use in hate, but to be used against us.

Isaiah 49

“Israel, A Light to the Nations

Listen to me, distant nations,
you people who live far away!
Before I was born, the Lord chose me
and appointed me to be his servant.
2
He made my words as sharp as a sword.
With his own hand he protected me.[a]
He made me like an arrow,
sharp and ready for use.
3
He said to me, “Israel, you are my servant;
because of you, people will praise me.”